Remember the good old web palette? Colors that have names in CSS: navy, green, maroon, red, etc? Orange that was added in CSS Level 2? Well, they don’t look good anymore. Most designers don’t use these default colors, apart from maybe black and white, instead, they usually create unique color schemes for websites.

If you don’t want to spend a lot of time looking for a good color scheme for your new website, check out Colors, a “a nicer color palette for the web”.

The standard Go log package is pretty barebones, but is fine for many simple programs. For more complex applications, though, you’d probably want to have different log levels for different events. There are many logging packages, such as the previously covered log15 that implement log leveling and provide other features. HashiCorp’s logutils is something different.

It all started when I saw the latest version of Font Awesome (the icon font I use, love, and recommend) and realized that of 40 new icons, 13 were brand icons, and most of them are, to be fair, useless. Who needs an icon for Leanpub? Or Shirtsinbulk, whatever that is?

There are numerous small Lisp/Scheme implementations, and probably most of them are unfinished or unmaintained. I found serious, production-ready tiny Scheme interpreters for you to embed in your C or C++ programs.

While browsers have built-in support for tooltips, which can be added by setting the title attribute, unfortunately, such tooltips don’t look good and have a long delay before they appear. There are many JavaScript libraries for better looking and better behaving tooltips, for example, Bootstrap includes one. It turns out, though, that you can implement them with CSS alone, and that’s what Hint.css does.